OBJECTIVE/HYPOTHESIS: The objective of the study was to investigate predictive factors in the postoperative hearing outcomes in pediatric stapedectomy. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case series. The study was performed in a tertiary academic otological practice. METHODS: The outcome of 66 stapedectomies in children 17 years of age and younger were analyzed according to the 1995 American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Committee on Hearing and Equilibrium guidelines. Factors evaluated included patient age, underlying diagnosis (tympanosclerosis, otosclerosis, congenital fixation), type of footplate graft and type of prosthesis used, associated ossicular abnormalities, and revision surgery. RESULTS: The mean postoperative air-bone gap following stapedectomy in children with tympanosclerotic footplate fixation (24.9 dB [+/-11 dB]) was significantly worse than in patients with an underlying diagnosis of congenital stapes fixation (15.7 dB [+/-9 dB]) or otosclerosis (13.1 dB [+/-3 dB]) (P =.024). Revision stapedectomy was also associated with a poorer outcome, but patient age and prosthesis and graft type did not contribute to the outcome in a statistically significant manner. CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric patients with stapes fixation resulting from tympanosclerosis showed poorer outcomes from stapedectomy than patients with congenital or otosclerotic fixation. Outcomes for congenital or otosclerosis fixation more nearly matched the outcomes in the literature for adult series.
OBJECTIVE/HYPOTHESIS: The objective of the study was to investigate predictive factors in the postoperative hearing outcomes in pediatric stapedectomy. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case series. The study was performed in a tertiary academic otological practice. METHODS: The outcome of 66 stapedectomies in children 17 years of age and younger were analyzed according to the 1995 American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Committee on Hearing and Equilibrium guidelines. Factors evaluated included patient age, underlying diagnosis (tympanosclerosis, otosclerosis, congenital fixation), type of footplate graft and type of prosthesis used, associated ossicular abnormalities, and revision surgery. RESULTS: The mean postoperative air-bone gap following stapedectomy in children with tympanosclerotic footplate fixation (24.9 dB [+/-11 dB]) was significantly worse than in patients with an underlying diagnosis of congenital stapes fixation (15.7 dB [+/-9 dB]) or otosclerosis (13.1 dB [+/-3 dB]) (P =.024). Revision stapedectomy was also associated with a poorer outcome, but patient age and prosthesis and graft type did not contribute to the outcome in a statistically significant manner. CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric patients with stapes fixation resulting from tympanosclerosis showed poorer outcomes from stapedectomy than patients with congenital or otosclerotic fixation. Outcomes for congenital or otosclerosis fixation more nearly matched the outcomes in the literature for adult series.
Authors: Sara Duarte Sena Esteves; Ana Pereira da Silva; Miguel Bebiano Coutinho; José Manuel Abrunhosa; Cecília Almeida e Sousa Journal: Braz J Otorhinolaryngol Date: 2014 May-Jun